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Tattoo Faith

I first met Pastor Nadia Bolz-Weber on a Sunday evening before worship at her emerging liturgical Lutheran church, House of All Sinners and Saints, in downtown Denver. As she extended her hand to greet me, I noticed her arms were covered in colorful tattoos, but it wasn't until I ran into her again a few days later that I got a closer look. When I mentioned I was looking for someone to write about the Christian liturgical year for Patheos, she pulled up her sleeve and smiled. "I have the liturgical year tattooed on my arm."

Indeed, cascading down the front of this pastor's arm from shoulder to wrist, was the entire Christian story in tattoo. There, in vivid detail, was the deep darkness and gleaming stars of Creation; the Angel Gabriel announcing the birth of Christ; Mary, Joseph, and Jesus (and the animals!) at the Nativity; Jesus fasting in the desert; Good Friday and the Crucifixion; Mary and the women at the empty tomb; and the first apostles with tongues of fire at Pentecost. It was the most beautiful tattoo I had ever seen, not to mention a stunning display of faith.

I sat down with Nadia recently at St. Mark's coffeehouse in Denver to ask her about her tattoos, the relationship between her body art and her faith, and "tattoo evangelism. "

So how long did it take to tattoo the entire liturgical year on your arm?

Twenty hours ... but you don't do it all at once! You can only get tattooed for about three or four hours at a time and then your endorphins run out and it really hurts. I started this tattoo a couple of years ago. You have to wait a month in between sessions for the skin to heal before they can start again, so it was a really long process.

What compelled you to have the Christian "story," from beginning to end, tattooed on your arm?

I loved the idea of having the liturgical year on my arm. It felt perfect for me. It's my favorite tattoo I've ever gotten.

What is it about the liturgical year that you find so meaningful?

The thing that I like about it is that it patterns our lives in an almost counter-cultural manner. When you are walking through the regular temporal year and, at the same time, the liturgical year, it's an overlay of our faith on our lives on a daily basis. It allows us to have dual citizenship. Right now, I'm definitely experiencing the third week in November just like everybody else and what that means in terms of the seasons and Thanksgiving, but I'm also realizing that these are the last days of the liturgical year, and that "Christ the King" is on Sunday. You get to experience a patterned life, and not just with your worshipping community, but with all of the holy catholic apostolic church. So when we are entering Advent, everyone across the planet is entering Advent as well. It ends up connecting us to other people in a way that nothing else can -- this shared experience.

We are a people of The Book, like Jews and Muslims are people of The Book. So I talk about being people of The Story. We enact this story not only throughout the year in terms of the liturgical year, but every Sunday we are embodying the liturgical tradition. We are physically singing the story, hearing the story, taking it in with the Eucharist, and then going out into the world having embodied the story. So we are constantly living in that dual citizenship. It's almost mystical, but at the same time it's completely quotidian, it's totally embodied.

Deborah Arca is the former Director of Content at Patheos. Prior to joining Patheos, Deborah managed the Programs in Christian Spirituality at the San Francisco Theological Seminary, including the Program's renowned spiritual direction program and the nationally-renowned Lilly-funded Youth Ministry & Spirituality Project. Deborah has also been a youth minister, a director of music and theatre programs for children and teens, and a music minister. Deborah belongs to a progressive United Church of Christ church in Englewood, CO.